The book is more like an anthology. There's a central one, but there's just a bunch of different characters who are dealing with this universe in indifferent ways. So the story that we are talking about earlier, dana is a therapist within one of these support groups,. Sheis te like group leader, support group er. And you want to talk about horhay first, because he has a small, self contained story. He meets with dana, a tetherapist, for a few sessions. It's not relevant to the rest of the plot, but he is a perfect little arc that that illustrates some of thephil pical ideas too.
David and Tamler dive back into the Ted Chiang well and explore the fascinating world described in "Anxiety is the Dizziness of Freedom." What if you could interact with alternate versions of yourself - versions that made different choices, had different jobs, or different partners? Would you get jealous of your other selves if they were more successful? Would you want them to be unhappy so you could feel better about your own choices and path? If your alternate self was in a good relationship with a woman, would you try to track down the version of that woman in this world? If you made an immoral choice but your other self made the moral one, what does that say about your character? And what does it say about free will and responsibility?
So many questions, such an interesting story - turns out we need to dedicate another segment next time to conclude the discussion. Hope you enjoy it! If you haven't bought Exhalation (Ted Chiang's new collection) We can't recommend it highly enough. This is the last story in that collection.
Plus – we select the topic finalists for our beloved Patreon listener-selected episode. Will Denial of Death make the cut again?
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